Accidental poisoning of preschool children from medicinal substances, Australia
Citation
AIHW
AIHW, O'Connor P (2002) Accidental poisoning of preschool children from medicinal substances, Australia, AIHW, Australian Government, accessed 05 May 2024.
APA
AIHW, O'Connor P. (2002). Accidental poisoning of preschool children from medicinal substances, Australia. Canberra: AIHW.
MLA
AIHW, O'Connor P. Accidental poisoning of preschool children from medicinal substances, Australia. AIHW, 2002.
Vancouver
AIHW, O'Connor P. Accidental poisoning of preschool children from medicinal substances, Australia. Canberra: AIHW; 2002.
Harvard
AIHW, O'Connor P 2002, Accidental poisoning of preschool children from medicinal substances, Australia, AIHW, Canberra.
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The most common agent of poisoning amongst preschoolers admitted to hospital in Australia was the group of aromatic analgesics including paracetamol. However, the more important agents, in terms of health burden, were anticoagulant medications, tranquillisers, barbiturates and antipsychotic and neuroepileptic medications. Thankfully, very few preschoolers die from medical poisoning in Australia. The low severity of medicinal poisonings could reflect the effectiveness of the legislative controls on the availability of poisons in Australia. The hospitalisation rate of preschoolers from medicinal poisoning was higher in rural and remote areas than in urban areas. This result does not seem to reflect differential hospital admission practices, because there were no significant differences in the length of stay distributions by area. It is likely to reflect a higher incidence of poisoning in rural and remote areas.
- ISSN: 1444 3791
- ISBN: 978 1 74024 171 7
- Cat. no: INJCAT 39
- Pages: 51